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The Manchester Writers

John Harris investigates how writers in 1930s Manchester continue to shape perceptions of the north of England. From 2010.

John Harris explores the work of a group of authors who captured a northern social realism in the 1930s.

Their writing went on to shape the views of northern living for generations.

Walter Greenwood, Howard Spring and Louis Golding wrote about Greater Manchester at a time of severe economic depression and great poverty and their novels describe conditions that have resonances with our life today - cuts in welfare, increased unemployment and a coalition government.

Greenwood's 'Love on the Dole', Golding's 'Magnolia Street' and Spring's 'Fame is the Spur' depict a tough, working class life and although the three authors wrote from slightly different perspectives, they describe people enduring a grim, hard existence in an industrial landscape.

As the final parts of industrial Manchester and Salford are finally transformed by investment and modernisation, we visit the streets that inspired these authors.

How has their work endured and influenced ideas of northern England?

Producer: Helen Lee

First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in August 2010.

30 minutes

Last on

Wed 26 Nov 202500:30

Broadcasts

  • Thu 12 Aug 201011:30
  • Fri 17 Jun 201606:30
  • Fri 17 Jun 201613:30
  • Fri 17 Jun 201620:30
  • Sat 18 Jun 201601:30
  • Tue 3 Sep 201906:30
  • Tue 3 Sep 201913:30
  • Tue 3 Sep 201920:30
  • Wed 4 Sep 201901:30
  • Tue 25 Nov 202510:30
  • Tue 25 Nov 202516:30
  • Wed 26 Nov 202500:30